31 S.E. 391 | N.C. | 1898
In May, 1890, the plaintiff and his partner, now dead, conveyed a tract of land to a trustee to secure their indebtedness to the British American Mortgage Company. There was at (227) that time on the land one steam engine and boiler, one sawmill, one cotton gin, and one set of millstones, with the attachments, pulleys and shafting, to each, necessary for their proper use, all so fastened to the premises as to make them fixtures, and it is conceded that they were fixtures at that time. In June of the same year the plaintiffs executed another deed to the same trustee to secure the same debts, conveying the same engine, sawmill, cotton gin and millstones, etc.
Under regular foreclosure proceedings to which the plaintiff was a party, a decree of sale foreclosing the first deed was entered in 1897, and sale made, confirmed and deed made to the purchaser Richardson, who afterwards sold to the defendants, there being no exception of the fixtures in the deed, nor at the sale. *179
The plaintiff (trustor) now sues to recover said fixtures on the idea that the second deed, between the same parties, severed the fixtures and made them personalty as a matter of law, without any agreement in fact that they should be severed. That is the only question to be considered.
Since Elwees v. Mowe, 2 Smith's Leading Cases, the subject of fixtures has been often before the courts in its application to the various relations of the litigating parties, it being held therein that much depended on those relations.
In Overman v. Sasser,
In Moore v. Valentine,
An illustration of the first proposition is found in Bond v. Coke,
Such fixtures as those in the present case are a part of the land, as much so as a house or a tree, until actual severance, and a deed conveying the land, without any exception, in legal effect passes the title to the steam engine, etc., to the purchaser, who received his title under the sale decreed by the court. Even if there had been a verbal agreement to revest in the plaintiff the title to the fixtures, it (the title) could not pass except in the manner required by the statute of frauds.
The second deed does not profess to work a severance, nor to assume expressly that an actual severance had occurred; but it undertakes to convey an interest that had already passed by the first deed. If the idea was to convey the equity of redemption to the same (229) *180 trustee, the plaintiff's equity to redeem would still remain. The second deed would have no effect on the rights of the purchaser. It was probably made under some doubt in the minds of the contracting parties, whether the fixtures passed with the land under the first deed, or not.
Other questions were argued, by they are of no importance in the case. In any aspect of this case, we think the judgment was erroneous.
Reversed.